U.S. Opening Bell: Equity Reflation Trade Set To Resume; Yields, Dollar Surge

 | Feb 04, 2021 12:14

  • Steepest 30Y:5Yyield curve in years
  • Cyclical trade hits bump but reflation trade to resume
  • Economically sensitive sectors in position to outperform
  • Key Events/h2

    The global rally in stocks that paused on Wednesday appears ready to resume during Thursday's Wall Street session, based on pre-US open futures trading. Contracts for the Dow and S&P, were led higher by NASDAQ futures, while Russell 2000 futures were in the red. Investors continue to remain positive following strong corporate results and the decision by Democrats to go it alone in passing their $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief plan.

    The dollar moved higher as gold slumped.

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    The story of the equity market's oscillating cyclical rotation is currently being displayed via US futures trading. The rally, which began in November, was led by stocks sensitive to the economic cycle. These sectors were the ones that plunged during the COVID-19 lockdowns, as investors moved capital into technology and other sectors that benefited from the work-from-home environment.

    The “reflation trade,” which benefits shares in companies that will do well in the post-pandemic environment resurfaced recently since the expected fiscal stimulus, combined with the ongoing monetary easing, will spur economic growth and benefit businesses that suffered during the lockdowns. Meanwhile technology shares suffered. 

    But what we've been seeing recently has been a a whipsawing version of the reflation trade. Tech has been leading the rallies when market leadership shifted out of the cyclical trade. But On Wednesday, the NASDAQ outperformed during the US session, at least at first.

    However, by the close it was in the red, while small caps—which excel during an economic recovery—posted the best results. This morning, however, perhaps ominously, tech futures are leading and contracts on US small caps are lagging, trading in negative territory at time of writing.

    The STOXX 600 Index pushed higher with energy shares amid mixed earnings results. Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn) wiped out earlier gains even after the German lender posted annual profits for the first time in six years. Global household and personal products giant Unilever (AS:ULVR) dropped after it disappointed analysts’ expectations on restructuring charges.